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We want you to love your new art, so if a piece doesn't quite work in your space, return it within seven days of receiving your order and we'll issue you a refund for the price of the art.

Art must be returned in its original packaging. We will pay for return shipping on pieces measuring up to 50 inches on the longest side. For larger artwork we charge a return shipping fee of $300. Customers located outside of the United States are responsible for the cost of return shipping and any duties.

In the middle of my thirtieth year, Delvin and I took a road trip into the hills of Saganaughy County. Just as we spotted the dwindling of a pleasant afternoon gathering at an understated home on the side of the road, I asked him to pull over so I could pick wild berries. He said, "What would a robot do with wild berries?" We had our photo taken. Thus began the running joke that has continued for the last decade or two. It was an unpredictable time of my life.

This, as well as the other acrylic/collage robots in this series have so far been derived from vintage photos that my husband and I found lying in the snow in Brussels several years ago.

This piece is on a cradled wood panel. The sides are finished with the torn, yellowed pages of a novel. The work comes wired and ready to hang.

As a kid, Diane Flick often empathized with inanimate objects; she worried a Kleenex box on her headboard felt unloved because she never held it as she did her stuffed animals. Consequently, she would sometimes add it to her plush family for snuggling. Looking through the lenses of playfulness, emotional warmth, and scenes from a dramatic childlike imagination, the ‘bots series seeks to explore the sentience of non-sentient beings. Diane hasn’t owned a TV in 15 years, but she still loves watching Golden Girls DVD’s with her sister.